17*9 = 17*(10-1) = 17*10 - 17*1 = 170 - 17People who do not know the 17 times table might find the equivalent version easier to evaluate.
588 is a single number. A number does not have a distributive property. The distributive property is exhibited by two binary operations (such as multiplication and addition) defined over a field.
The distributive property is not related to finding equivalent fractions. The distributive property is a rule that states a(b + c) is equal to ab + ac. It is used to simplify expressions and perform operations like multiplication or addition. To find an equivalent fraction, you would need to multiply or divide the numerator and denominator by the same nonzero number.
To apply the distributive property to an algebraic expression, you multiply each term inside the parentheses by the number or variable outside the parentheses. For example, to simplify 2(x + 3), you would multiply 2 by both x and 3, resulting in 2x + 6.
No. The distributive property applies to two operations (usually multiplication and addition), NOT to numbers.
The distributive property applies to two mathematical operations over some set - not a single number!
This question is so poorly phrased as to be unanswerable! There is no such thing as a distrubitive property. There is a distributive property but that is a property that applies to two binary operations (for example, the distributive property of multiplication over addition), but NOT to numbers. Also, there is no such word as algabraic. In any case, since there is no such thing as a distrubitive property number or even a distributive property number, it is not possible to convert that non-existent thing into an algebraic expression.
25 = 5*5 = (2+3)*5 = (2*5) + (3*5) = 10 + 15 =25
The distributive property applies to two binary operations, not to an individual number. It is therefore, impossible to make "786 distributive property".
588 is a single number. A number does not have a distributive property. The distributive property is exhibited by two binary operations (such as multiplication and addition) defined over a field.
Distributive property
The distributive property is not related to finding equivalent fractions. The distributive property is a rule that states a(b + c) is equal to ab + ac. It is used to simplify expressions and perform operations like multiplication or addition. To find an equivalent fraction, you would need to multiply or divide the numerator and denominator by the same nonzero number.
To apply the distributive property to an algebraic expression, you multiply each term inside the parentheses by the number or variable outside the parentheses. For example, to simplify 2(x + 3), you would multiply 2 by both x and 3, resulting in 2x + 6.
The distributive property applies to two binary operations, not to an individual number. It is therefore, impossible to make "786 distributive property".
No. The distributive property applies to two operations (usually multiplication and addition), NOT to numbers.
The distributive property applies to two mathematical operations over some set - not a single number!
A number cannot have the distributive property. The distributive property is a property that one binary operator (for example, multiplication) has over another (addition) for a set of numbers or other mathematical objects (matrices).
To simplify using the distributive property, you distribute a number or variable outside a set of parentheses to each term inside the parentheses. For example, if you have the expression 3(x + 2), you would distribute the 3 to both x and 2 to get 3x + 6. This helps you combine like terms and simplify the expression further.